Who

Where There's Smoke...

Here’s the thing, game developers: I don’t want to buy your game if it isn’t
on Steam.

I’m exaggerating, of course. When I say “on Steam,” what I really mean is “I
don’t want to buy your game if I can’t buy it and immediately download it to
my hard drive, on any number of arbitrary desktops and laptops that I own, via
a service that keeps track of whether or not I bought the game forever.”

I came to this realization only slowly. Like the rest of the PC gaming world,
I was distrustrful of Steam at first. It was subject to network issues. There
were the inevitable worries about DRM-style lockouts. But after the complete
disaster that was my purchase, last year, of
Spore, I’m basically at
peace with the idea that I will never buy a PC game that ships on a disc
again.(footnote 1)

The irony is that in practice Steam has proven, over the past 6 years, to be
way more reliable than any of my CDs. Now, while I’m sure many gamers are more
OCD than me, here is the situation:

I have lost your goddamned disc (or, even better, one of them).

If I haven’t lost your goddamned disc, then the goddamned disc is damaged and can’t be read any more.

If the disc can be read, it probably has some DRM scheme which requires me to devote an extra 600 Mb on my hard drive to an image of it, so that I don’t have to put it in the drive.

As god as my witness, by all that is sacred and profane, there is absolutely no conceivable constellation of circumstances that will cause me, for whatever reason, to take your goddamn disc on an airplane, which means I will never play your game on a laptop. Ever.

This came to my attention tonight when for some obscure reason I wanted to re-
play parts of The Temple of Elemental Evil and, of course, I can only find
one goddamned disc of the 2 goddamned disc set. So, no game for me.

Meanwhile, I still remember, like a religious experience, when I installed
Steam on a new computer sometime in 2005. I had long since lost my Half-Life
disc, and in fact was installing Steam to pick up a completely different game.
I logged into my account, and saw, to my utter shock, all of the Half-Life
games I had previously bought. Waiting for me. Steam has reminded me of games
that I forgot I owned.

Even better than Steam, of course, are DRM-unencumbered direct digital
downloads. As long as the game is self-contained, backing it up myself is no
big deal. But some game developers don’t like this, so: use Steam (or Impulse,
or Good Old Games, or gamersgate, or whatever).

For me, this urge to avoid discs is so strong that I have actually re-bought
games that I already own via Steam, just so that I can throw away the
goddamned discs. I plan on doing that with Jagged Alliance 2, next, which you
can buy direct from the publisher, Strategy First.